Thursday, September 12, 2013

Justification is by faith alone, but not by a faith that is alone

You don't get to heaven by living a good life or by doing good works, but by faith. However, living faith produces good works. Our reward in heaven will be according to our good works. 

Essential Truths of the Christian Faith. Copyright © 1992 by R. C. Sproul. All rights reserved.

Essential Truths of the Christian Faith

Faith and Works
===============
Many people assume that by trying to live a good life, they have done all that
is necessary to get to heaven. They rest their confidence on the good works
they have performed to satisfy the demands of God's justice.

This is a futile hope. God's law requires perfection. Since we are not
perfect, we lack the necessary goodness to enter heaven. Thus goodness can
never be achieved by living a good life. We can only receive it by trusting in
the righteousness of Christ. His merit is perfect and is made available to us
through faith.

To believe that we are justified by our good works apart from faith is to
embrace the heresy of legalism. To believe that we are justified by a kind of
faith that produces no works is to embrace the heresy of antinomianism.

The relationship of faith and good works is one that may be distinguished but
never separated. Though our good works add no merit to our faith before God,
and though the sole condition of our justification is our faith in Christ, if
good works do not follow from our profession of faith, it is a clear
indication that we do not possess justifying faith. The Reformed formula is
"We are justified by faith alone, but not by a faith that is alone." True
justification always results in the process of sanctification. If there is
justification, sanctification will inevitably follow. If sanctification does
not follow, it is certain that justification was not really present. This does
not mean that justification depends or rests upon sanctification.
Justification depends on true faith, which in turn will inevitably lead to
works of obedience.

When James declared that faith without works is dead, he asserted that such
"faith" cannot justify anyone because it is not alive. Living faith produces
good works, but these good works are not the basis for justification. Only the
merit achieved by Jesus Christ can justify the sinner.

It is a grievous error, indeed a modern form of the antinomian heresy, to
suggest that a person can be justified by embracing Jesus as Savior but not as
Lord. True faith accepts Christ as both Savior and Lord. To rely on Christ
alone for salvation is to acknowledge one's total dependence upon Him and to
repent of one's sin. To repent of sin is to submit to Christ's authority over
us. To deny His lordship is to seek justification with an impenitent faith,
which is no faith.

Though our good works do not merit salvation, they are the basis upon which
God promises to distribute rewards in heaven. Our entrance into the kingdom of
God is by faith alone. Our reward in the kingdom will be according to our good
works, which is, as Augustine noted, a case of God's gracious crowning of His
own gifts.

No one can be justified by good works. Only through faith in Christ can we be
justified.

Faith and good deeds must be distinguished but never separated. True faith
always produces works of obedience.

Justification is by faith alone, but not by a faith that is alone.

Dead faith cannot justify.

Faith in Christ means trusting in Him as Savior and submitting to Him as Lord.

We are rewarded in heaven according to our good works, though this reward is
one of grace.

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Thursday, September 5, 2013

Faith means more than believing in God; it means believing God

This came from an email that I (Dana) receive once a week called "Essential Truths of the Christian Faith". This is truth worth sharing. 

"Faith is not a blind leap into darkness but a trust in God that will move us out of darkness into light. It is based on sound reason and historical evidence."

Essential Truths of the Christian Faith

Faith
=====
Christianity is often called a religion. More properly it is called a "faith."
We often speak of the Christian faith. It is called a faith because there is a
body of knowledge that is affirmed or believed by its adherents. It is also called a faith because the virtue of faith is central to its understanding of redemption.

What does faith mean? In our culture it is often mistaken for a blind belief
in something that is unreasonable. To call the Christian faith a "blind
faith," however, is not only demeaning to Christians, but an outrage to God.
When the Bible speaks of blindness it uses this image for people who, by their
sin, walk in darkness. Christianity calls people out of the darkness, not into
the darkness. Faith is the antidote to blindness, not the cause of it.

At its root, the term faith means "trust." To trust God is not an act of
unreasonable belief. God demonstrates Himself to be eminently trustworthy. He
gives ample reason for us to trust Him. He proves that He Himself is faithful
and worthy of our trust.

There is a huge difference between faith and credulity. To be credulous is to
believe something for no sound reason. It is the stuff of which superstition
is made and thrives on. Faith is established upon coherent and consistent
reasoning and upon sound empirical evidence. Peter writes, "For we did not
follow cunningly devised fables when we made known to you the power and coming
of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of His majesty" (2 Peter 1:16).

Christianity does not rest upon myths and fables but on the testimony of those
who saw with their eyes and heard with their ears. The truth of the gospel is
based on historical events. If the account of those events is not trustworthy,
then indeed our faith would be in vain. But God does not ask us to believe
anything on the basis of myth.

The book of Hebrews gives us a definition of faith: "Now faith is the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen" (Hebrews
11:1). Faith comprises the essence of our hope for the future. In simple terms
this means that we trust God for the future based on our faith in what He has
accomplished in the past. To believe that God will continue to be trustworthy
is not a gratuitous faith. There is every reason to believe that God will be
as faithful to His promises in the future as He has been in the past. There is
a reason, a substantive reason, for the hope that is within us.

The faith that is the evidence of things unseen has primary but not exclusive
reference to the future. Nobody has a crystal ball that works. We all walk
into the future by faith and not by sight. We may plan and make projections,
but even the best foresight we have is based upon our educated guesses. None
of us has experiential knowledge of tomorrow. We view the present and can
recall the past. We are experts in hindsight. The only solid evidence we have
for our own future is drawn from the promises of God. Here faith offers
evidence for things unseen. We trust God for tomorrow.

We also trust or believe that God exists. And although God Himself is unseen,
the Scriptures make it clear that the invisible God is made manifest through
the things that are visible (Romans 1:20). Though God is not visible to us, we
believe that He is there because He has manifested Himself so clearly in
creation and in history.

Faith includes believing in God. Yet that kind of faith is not particularly
praiseworthy. James writes, "You believe that there is one God. You do well.
Even the demons believe—and tremble!" (James 2:19). Here sarcasm drips from
James's pen. To believe in the existence of God merely qualifies us to be
demons. It is one thing to believe in God; it is another thing to believe God.
To believe God, to trust in Him for our very life, is the essence of the
Christian faith.

Christianity is a faith because it is based on a body of knowledge revealed by
God.

Faith is not a blind leap into darkness, but a trust in God that moves us out
of darkness into light.

Faith is simple, but not simplistic.

Faith is not credulity. It is based on sound reason and historical evidence.

Faith provides the substance for our future hope.

Faith involves trusting in what is not seen.

Faith means more than believing in God; it means believing God.

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Essential Truths of the Christian Faith. Copyright © 1992 by R. C. Sproul. All rights reserved.

This newsletter is one of Bible Gateway's many devotional and other inspirational email newsletters. If you aren't subscribed but would like to receive it, please visit our newsletter sign-up page to do so: http://links.biblegateway.mkt4731.com/ctt?kn=9&ms=NDI0OTcyMTAS1&r=NTM3ODQ0OTg4MTgS1&b=2&j=MjAxODM4OTU2S0&mt=1&rt=0